Trouville-sur-Mer
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Template:Infobox French commune
Trouville-sur-Mer (Template:IPA, literally Trouville on Sea), commonly referred to as Trouville, is a city of 4,603 inhabitants in the Calvados department in the Normandy region in northwestern France.
Trouville-sur-Mer borders Deauville across the River Touques. This fishing-village on the English Channel became a popular tourist attraction (beach-resort and holiday-destination) in Normandy from the 19th century. Its long sandy beach earned then the nickname of "queen of the beaches" ("Reine des plages") or "most beautiful beach in the world".<ref>Août 1870 : Claude Monet pose son chevalet à Trouville…</ref>
The name of Trouville is frequently associated with the names of the numerous painters that visited it and painted there, especially during the second part of the XIXth century: Claude Monet, Eugène Boudin, Raoul Dufy, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Gustave Caillebotte, Fernand Léger, etc.
Trouville remains today a city of leisure and vacation with a casino and numerous festivals, as well as a city of culture (Marcel Proust, Marguerite Duras, Raymond Savignac, etc.). Numerous celebrities own vacation homes in the city: Gérard Depardieu, Antoine de Caunes, Bettina Rheims, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Karl Zéro, etc.
Close to Paris and easily accessible by train, Trouville (as well as neighbouring Deauville) earned the nickname of 21st "Arrondissements of Paris".
Gallery
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Eugène Boudin, The Beach at Trouville, 1865, Princeton University Art Museum
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Eugène Boudin, The Beach at Trouville (Trouville, La Plage), Brooklyn Museum
Population
The town's inhabitants are called Trouvillais in French. Template:Historical populations
International relations
Trouville-sur-Mer is twinned with:
- Template:Flagicon Barnstaple, United Kingdom<ref name="Archant twinning">Template:Cite web</ref>
- Template:Flagicon Vrchlabí, Czech Republic